Leonardo’s paintings, from notebook to canvas

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff.168v-161r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

Leonardo is equally well known for his paintings as he is for his scientific drawings and inventions. Yet while we still have around 7,000 pages of Leonardo’s sketchbooks notes (including the 250 folios of the Codex Arundel), only around 15 paintings have survived.

Many of the pages of Leonardo’s notebooks feature sketches that bear a resemblance to details from his paintings. These are examples of Leonardo’s process of thinking while drawing.

Other notebook pages show how Leonardo applied his precise observations of the natural world to the representation of the natural world in his paintings. The Codex Arundel thus contains numerous examples where we find tantalising glimpses of Leonardo the painter.

These drawings of rivers flowing through a mountainous landscape are echoed in the background of many of Leonardo’s paintings.

Ginevra de' Benci [obverse] (c. 1474/1478) by Leonardo da VinciNational Gallery of Art, Washington DC

The rivers in these Italian landscapes often played a symbolic, religious role, as a carrier of life.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff.113v-114r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

This is a page of landscape studies in which Leonardo investigates the size, shape and intensity of shadows, the findings of which Leonardo may have used in his paintings.

The Last Supper - after Leonardo da Vinci. (1865) by UnknownThe J. Paul Getty Museum

The Last Supper

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, f.153r (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

Proportional relationships were important to Leonardo’s understanding of mechanics, but also informed his analysis of his studies of the human body. The seated figures shown here are studies related to The Last Supper, which Leonardo was also working on in at this time.

The Last Supper - after Leonardo da Vinci. (1865) by UnknownThe J. Paul Getty Museum

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff. 253v-256r. (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

The Virgin on the Rocks

On first impression this page appears to be blank. However, on closer inspection, a number of sketches are barely discernible…

Here for example, it is possible to make out a sketch of a child’s head, seen from above. This, and three other sketches on the sheet, appear to relate to figures that Leonardo painted in The Virgin on the Rocks.

Codex Arundel, Arundel MS 263, ff. 253v-256r. Photographed under UV light (1478–1518) by Leonardo da VinciOriginal Source: Arundel MS 263

The images become more apparent when viewed under ultraviolet light… Now seen more clearly, it is possible to see the similarities between the sketch the young Christ as depicted in the painting.

The next sketch is of the lower half of the body of a kneeling child, which closely corresponds to the figure of St John the Baptist.

The third sketch is of the right foot of a child, very similar to the right foot of Christ.

The fourth sketch of the left foot corresponds to Christ’s left foot.

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